Samantha Ford: Margate mum killed twins amid bout of ‘acute depression’

UK
Jake and Chloe Ford Image copyright Steven Ford
Image caption Jake and Chloe Ford died on Boxing Day

A mother drowned her toddler twins in a “narcissistic rage” after her marriage broke down, a court has heard.

Samantha Ford, 38, killed 23-month-old Jake and Chloe on Boxing Day last year after their father Steven Ford left her.

A psychiatrist told a judge she had killed them in an act of “retaliation and punishment” against Mr Ford.

Mr Justice Edis Will sentence Ford on 16 August after hearing further psychiatric evidence at the Old Bailey.

Prosecutors previously accepted a guilty plea to manslaughter by diminished responsibility.

Ford was in the grip of acute depression when the twins’ bodies were found at a house in Margate, Kent, on 27 December, the court heard.

They were discovered after Ford had tried to take her own life by driving without a seatbelt at about 100mph into the back of a lorry.

The court heard she told police: “I’ve killed my babies. Please let me die.

“I put them in the bath. We were meant to be together.”

‘Ripped my world apart’

Ford and her husband had spent the first 10 years of their marriage in Qatar before moving to Charing, Kent, last year.

She was angry at having left her affluent lifestyle and was said to be trying to pressure her husband into returning to in the Middle East.

The couple split last November, and she moved with the twins to a rented house in Castle Drive, Margate.

Her mental health rapidly declined and she made multiple internet searches into different methods of suicide, the court heard.

Prosecutor Tom Kark QC said she had sent multiple text messages to her estranged husband, including one which read: “You have ripped my world apart”.

“She was very upset that the relationship had broken down and didn’t like the idea of becoming a single mother,” Mr Kark said.

‘Ultimate punishment’

Image caption Toys were left outside the twins’ house after their deaths

In a victim impact statement, Mr Ford said he thought his children would have been “terrified, confused and that they suffered” in death.

“This was the most heinous, spiteful act on two innocent children. I have no doubt (Ford) did this with the intention of taking her own life and punishing me in the process.

“I know how she behaves when things don’t go her way and when she doesn’t get what she wants.

“It’s an extreme version of her character because she couldn’t get her own way – knowing how much I loved the children she knew it would be the ultimate punishment for me not going back to her.”

Consultant forensic psychiatrist Dr Muzzaffar Hussain, who has treated Ford, said her actions could be attributed to a “narcissistic rage” at her perceived humiliation at the hands of her husband.

Dr Hussain said Ford had displayed a “sense of entitlement”, and attributed “bad things that happen” to others.

He went on to say she had been experiencing a “homicide/suicide fantasy”, which he believed was “in play as a way of retaliation and of punishment of Mr Ford for leaving her – a sense of ‘this is what you made me do’.”

The court heard that, while in hospital, Ford had talked of voices telling her to kill the children – claims she had not made before she was hospitalised.

“Unfortunately I think it’s a wish to appear more severely ill than she is,” he said.

“I don’t deny that she is ill but I think there’s a wish to come across more severely unwell than she is and there’s a part of that that’s coloured the narrative a little bit.”

Brenda Campbell QC, for Ford, said there had been 76 communications between Ford and mental health services in the weeks before the killings.